Looking out the windows of the house, no matter the direction, it's impossible to see an area of snow covered field or pasture that hasn't been penetrated with deer and/or turkey tracks; virgin snow doesn't last long around here!
This afternoon the turkeys rediscovered our apple trees, it seems they found the crabapples the most enticing. They went after them with vigor and then one of the birds hopped up into the adjacent apple tree and started shaking the big ones down that hadn't yet fallen.
At least the turkeys don't seem to be as hard on our apple trees as the raccoons are on our cherry trees. I'll have to get more serious this year about creating some sort of better barrier. An electric fence worked one year but it was a lot of work. With two wires 6" and 8" off the ground, we managed to harvest that season's cherries. Last summer, about a day before we were ready to pick, I walked out of the house and saw an entire family of bandits in the tree. By morning, the only thing left was the mess they left behind, a few broken branches with not one single sign of a red cherry left in the tree. It's too bad they can't be trained.
At least the turkeys don't seem to be as hard on our apple trees as the raccoons are on our cherry trees. I'll have to get more serious this year about creating some sort of better barrier. An electric fence worked one year but it was a lot of work. With two wires 6" and 8" off the ground, we managed to harvest that season's cherries. Last summer, about a day before we were ready to pick, I walked out of the house and saw an entire family of bandits in the tree. By morning, the only thing left was the mess they left behind, a few broken branches with not one single sign of a red cherry left in the tree. It's too bad they can't be trained.